utterless
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]utterless (not comparable)
- (archaic, literary) Incapable of being uttered.
- Synonyms: ineffable, unutterable
- 1643, John Milton, The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce[1], London, page 45:
- Tis true, an adultres cannot be sham’d anough by any publick proceeding; but that woman whose honour is not appeach’t, is lesse injur’d by a silent dismission, being otherwise not illiberally dealth with, then to endure a clamouring debate of utterles things, in a busines of that civil secrecy and difficult discerning, as not to be over-much question’d by neerest friends.
- 1820, John Keats, Hyperion, Book 2, in Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, London: Taylor and Hessey, pp. 173-174,[2]
- […] there is a noise
- Among immortals when a God gives sign,
- With hushing finger, how he means to load
- His tongue with the full weight of utterless thought,
- With thunder, and with music, and with pomp:
- 1935, James Weldon Johnson, “If I Were Paris”, in Saint Peter Relates an Incident[3], Penguin, published 1993, page 59:
- Thin lines of care about her mouth,
And utterless longings in her eyes.